[Vision2020] City Council's Material Change

Phil Nisbet pcnisbet1 at hotmail.com
Wed Jan 4 22:42:36 PST 2006


Scott

YOu are still citing the method for Planning and Zoning Commission adoption 
of ordinances.  The City Council does not need to follow that procedure, 
they can chose to enact changes to the code based solely on legislation, 
which as I previously stated means they only need to hold a single public 
hearing and then pass an ordinance.

As for  67-6523. EMERGENCY ORDINANCES AND MORATORIUMS, you might want to 
look at what the terms mean.  There has to be the threat of something 
harmful to the community and no court in all the land is going to assume 
that the community is threatened by a lack of parking spaces.

It simply does not take that much to follow the law and have the required 
hearing prior to setting up the vote and a possible moritorium.  All the 
maximum effort push to subvert the law and force passage prior to doing the 
required steps as outlined are what will end this in a court of law at a 
pretty significant cost to taxpayers.  Is a two week difference worth worth 
that?

Phil Nisbet


>From: Scott Bauer <ds_bauer at yahoo.com>
>To: vision2020 at moscow.com
>Subject: RE: [Vision2020] City Council's Material Change
>Date: Wed, 4 Jan 2006 21:00:21 -0800 (PST)
>
>     Phil & Visionaries,
>
>   I was drafting a correction when you posted, so here is my correction as 
>well as a response to the issues you raised. Yes, you are correct. 
>Subsection (a) refers to P&Z and subsection (b) refers to City Council. 
>However, you missed one very important phrase in subsection (b): “as 
>provided by local ordinance,” which in this case refers to Moscow City Code 
>4-10-6. Beginning at subsection (D)(2), it states:
>     “The Planning and Zoning Commission shall forward its recommendation 
>to the Council within forty-five (45) days of the close of the initial 
>public hearing. The recommendation shall be in writing and shall set forth 
>the reasons for the Planning and Zoning Commission’s recommendation. 
>Dissenting members may submit written comments stating their reasons for 
>disagreement with the majority position on the proposal.
>
>   “3. Upon receipt of the Planning and Zoning Commission’s recommendation, 
>the Council shall determine whether to hold a second public hearing on the 
>subject of the initial legislative hearing. Upon an affirmative finding the 
>City shall publish notice of a legislative public hearing before the 
>Council stating the nature of the proposal and the time, place, and date of 
>the hearing.”
>   Moscow City Code 4-10-6(E) provides for City Council’s notice and 
>hearing requirements, stating,
>     “Second Hearing Procedures:
>   “1. Procedures for the second hearing, conducted this time before the 
>Council, shall be the same as for the initial hearing before the Planning 
>and Zoning Commission.
>   “2. At the conclusion of the second hearing the Council may take any of 
>the following actions:
>   “a. Adopt the proposal in ordinance form as originally proposed or as 
>recommended or modified by the Planning and Zoning Commission.
>   “b. Reject the change as proposed.
>   “c. Propose SUBSTANTIAL MODIFICATIONS to the proposal originally made or 
>to the proposal recommended by the Planning and Zoning Commission and 
>return the substantially modified proposal to the Planning and Zoning 
>Commission for a new initial hearing.” [Emphasis added]
>   Moscow City Code 4-10-6(E) implements Idaho Code 67-6509(b), which 
>states,
>     “Following consideration by the governing board, if the governing 
>board makes a MATERIAL CHANGE in the recommendation or alternative options 
>contained in the recommendation by the commission concerning adoption, 
>amendment or repeal of a plan, further notice and hearing shall be provided 
>before the governing board adopts, amends or repeals the plan.” [Emphasis 
>added]
>   Please note that City Council did not have the option of making a 
>substantial modification or material change to P&Z’s proposal without 
>remanding the amendment to P&Z, hence my “slap in the face” remark.
>
>   Regarding the moratorium, City Council did not have to declare a state 
>of emergency “that claimed that the health and safety of the citizens of 
>the city were at risk.” They simply had to say that “an imminent peril to 
>the public . . . welfare requires” the moratorium (see below). As the City 
>Attorney said, there is no case law interpreting the words “imminent 
>peril.” Presumably, the courts would analyze this phrase in relation to 
>land-development impact, vis-à-vis interference with Comprehensive Plan 
>objectives, not in terms of personal injury or property damage.
>
>   Scott
>
>     67-6523. EMERGENCY ORDINANCES AND MORATORIUMS.
>   If a governing board finds that an imminent peril to the public health, 
>safety, or welfare requires adoption of ordinances as required or 
>authorized under this chapter, or adoption of a moratorium upon the 
>issuance of selected classes of permits, or both, it shall state in writing 
>its reasons for that finding. The governing board may then proceed without 
>recommendation of a commission, upon any abbreviated notice of hearing that 
>it finds practical, to adopt the ordinance or moratorium. An emergency 
>ordinance or moratorium may be effective for a period of not longer than 
>one hundred eighty-two (182) days. Restrictions established by an emergency 
>ordinance or moratorium may not be imposed for consecutive periods. 
>Further, an intervening period of not less than one (1) year shall exist 
>between an emergency ordinance or moratorium and reinstatement of the same. 
>To sustain restrictions established by an emergency ordinance or moratorium 
>beyond the one hundred eighty-two (182) d!
>  ay
>  period, a governing board must adopt an interim or regular ordinance, 
>following the notice and hearing procedures provided in section 67-6509, 
>Idaho Code.
>
>
>
>
>---------------------------------
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